The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 30, 1982-Page 5 Massacre stirs Israe TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)- The slaughter of Palestinian refugees in Beirut is scarring the Israeli soul with guilt. "The day after the pogrom in the refugee camps in Beirut, I stood before the mirror for my morning shave, and I spat in my face," wrote Shalom Rosen- feld, a former editor-in-chief of Israel's prestigious daily newspaper Maariv. A CRISIS of moral values is wracking the Jewish state and threatening the stability of Prime Minister Menachem Begin's government. "Sorething has broken," says his predecessor, Yitzhak Rabin. But the critics are not just Begin's political foes, like Rabin. They also include people like Rosenfeld, Israelis from the prime minister's own ideological camp. The breakdown is somewhere in the psychological machinery that drives Israelis to try to live up to the image created by the founding fathers of Israel-a striving to be a new breed, different from their ghetto forefathers, removed from the Old World of hatred, wars and Holocaust. JUST AS today's Israeli is proud to believe he would never go like a lamb to the slaughter, so he is proud to think that he would never treat people the way Jews have been treated. What has horrified Israelis is not only that Christian Phalangists entered the refugee camps with Israel's approval, but the suspicion that the ar- my or government let the massacre continue without intervening immediately. What may ultimately help purge the guilt is that the Israeli government, under public pressure, is finally ii guilt facing up to the questions raised by the Beirut blood- bath. DEFENSE MINISTER Ariel Sharon said that when Israel took control of west Beirut two weeks ago, the Israeli forces helped plan and provided sup- port for the Christian Phalangists' move into the camps, an operation aimed at Palestinian guerrillas believed holed up there. Sharon said the Israeli army acted to stop the massacre as soon as it became clear that innocent men, women and children were being killed. But there have been conflicting accounts of when the Israelis learned the killings were going on, and questions about why the Phalangists were still in the camps a day after Israeli officials knew about the slaughter. Marines enter Beirut, e lDaily Photo by TOD WOOLF Tree launch No, Charlie Keehl of the Blacy Tree Transplant Co. is not inspecting a new kind of Viking ship. The workers are saving a tree from the construction site of the Business School addition at East University and Monroe streets. Senate vote keeps finaneja aid a ive i t may increase (Continued from Page 1) evacuati "WITHIN THE limited period of Organiza time, the multinational force will be and earli there, the United States expects the CATT( Israelis and Syrians will follow through 400 soldii on their intentions and withdraw from with the Lebanon," Romberg said. "The very north an presence of the multinational force said he d should encourage early agreement on joint pate these withdrawals." Lebani However, neither Israel nor Syria has 'Marines, indicated publicly that it expects the ding the withdrawal to be rapid. It was not clear bomb-da whether the deployment of the be open f multinational force would be extended Catto < absent an expedited withdrawal. be goin It was the second time that Marines patrols c were sent to the Lebanese capital. The today. B lea thernecks, members of the 32nd troops, Marine Amphibious Unit stationed with reinforc4 the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the ashore i Mediterranean, helped oversee the comman forces on of 6,000 Palestine Liberation ation guerrillas in late August er this month. O SAID a Lebanese battalion of ers has been assigned to work Marines in patrolling an area d east of the airport. But he [oubts the two forces will form rols. ese forces, rather than the will be responsible for guar- airport itself, he said. The maged airport is expected to or commercial flights today. also said that "some tanks will g in" after reconnaissance complete a survey of the area ut he said the exact number of tanks and artillery that will v the 900 infantrymen already s to be decided by the local nder, Col. James Mead. (Continued from Page 1) the afternoon, or on Friday." "THEN IT will be sent to the president," he continued. "If (Reagan) Signs it, (Congress) can go home. If not, they have to start all over again." Though federal financial aid ap- propriations for Basic Educational Op- portunity (Pell). Grants, Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants, College Work Study, and National Direct Student Loans will remain at their 82-83 levels, Butts warned studen- ts against too much optimism. "This extension only runs through ecember," he said. "After that nything could happen." HARVEY GROTRIAN, the Univer- sity's financial aid director, said the measure was "very welcome news." "It's particularly good news con- sidering we were faced with a 50 per- cent reduction in funds only a few mon- ths ago." Grotrian is referring to President Reagan's request in March to set the financial aid budget for 1983-84 at $1.4 illion, down from over $2.4 billion this ear. Some ills are (Continued-from Page 1) mother of two Tourette Syndrome children. "Why is human need less im- portant? Why is the decision as to which drug a company will develop left to an accountant who measures the needs of ociety with a calculator?" In a speech Tuesday to the conferen- ce, Meyers recalled trying to tell her son why there was no cure for "his disease. "How can you explain to a 10- year-old boy that his life is too expen- sive, that his disability is necessary for economic reasons?" Conferees were' hopeful that this week's meeting will encourage the organization of the various orphan disease groups into a coalition with political muscle. "We've had a very in- *formal coalition for about two years," Meyers said. The separate agencies have little political power on their own, she said, but together they could have great political power. BECAUSE THE pharmaceutical in- dustry and the government are reluc- tant to research and develop orphan, drugs, the burden rests with university- "I think (the vote) clearly indicates the administration is not getting its way in terms of financial aid," he said. "The vote clearly identifies education and educated people as a very visible resource in the mind of Congress." GROTRIAN SAID that although he is pleased with the vote, the University will still be taking a seven percent reduction in funds compared to 1980-81 levels. He said that reduction is about the same as the national decrease in appropriations. "Costs are up and aid is down," Grotrian said. "We can't tolerate that too long and expect to keep amix of students from in and out of the state and from all economic strata." BUTTS SAID the 1983-84 ap- propriation will include $217 million in additional funds Congress approved with an override Sept. 10. Congressional aides and Washington observers expressed confidence that there will be time for both houses to draft and vote on a compromise resolution before the government's new fiscal year begins at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow. orphans' based scientists, according to Brewer. But scientists can be discouraged by a lack of funds and the tedious process of research, he said. Jess Thoene, a professor in the medical school, found drug supply to be his biggest worry in researching a drug to cure cystinosis, a kidney disease. Thoene's supply of the drug, cysteamine, was stopped abruptly when the drug company quit producing it. Thoene located a new supply only week before his 65 patients would have exhausted their store. Thoene said his problem was the or- phan drug status of cysteamine. "You don't run out of penicillin," he said. TO ADDRESS the problem, the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (PMA) has set up a com- mission designed to forward resear- chers' ideas to drug manufacturers in hope that some company will sponsor, or "adopt" the project. John Adams, a PMA spokesman, said the commission has been "underwhelmed by the response" from researchers who were contacted to submit proposals. the 3rd issue of the MICHIGAN IOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE is now available for $1.50 Copies will be distributed Monday through Friday, 6618 Haven Hall, 12-2 p.m. *O9y -V P- f N -. 1 oQ- C - villge corner 601 5. FOREST 995-8 AM/FM WALKMANS ... Casette WALKMANS ... . Not Adv. . . . . . . . . . . . $49.90 . . . . . . . . . . . $65.50 0 OUR PRICE $19.00 $30.00 $48.00 $32.00 FM Stereo Cassette WALKMANS ..... $125.50 Mini Cassette Recorders ............ $59.80 many other audio products at comparably great prices sold at RAGS to RICHES 1218 S. UNIVERSITY, next to Campus Theater EVERY FRIDAY, 6-10 pm Only SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICES-ACT NOW and SAVE 7 '1 o~oenHear a o oe ifferent Drummer? "A revelation... [Gilligan] flips old prejudices against women on their ears. She reframes qualities regarded as women's weaknesses and shows them to be human strengths. It is impossible to consider [her] ideas...without having your estimation of women rise, without noticing a shift in the way you hear women and men, and judge what you hear." - Vogue ? C .. .... "Important... consistently pro- vocative and imag- inative...Gilligan does for her field what Matina Horner did for the field of J 1. "Feminism at its best... R[illigan] gives us the testi- mony of women who are struggling with personal and moral issues: then achievement motivation." -New York Times Book Review she points out how their concerns and their very style of struggling diverge from that of men." - The Boston Globe Ina Different Voice Psychological Theory and Women's Development Carol Gilligan $15.00 I Computer. Science & Electrical Engineering Majors*.. ROLM, with locations in the San Francisco Bay Area and Austin, Texas, seeks talented individuals interested in: SOFTWARE " Real-Time Computing " Distributed Systems . Operating Systems " Data Base Management Systems " Data Communications " Diagnostics " Electronic Mail . Software Tools: Compilers, Debuggers, etc. " Test Engineering " Support Engineering ROLM Corporation, founded in 1969, has experienced a growth rate exceeding 70% a year and currently has more than 5200 employees. ROLM is the leading independent supplier of computer controlled voice and data business communications systems and has been a pioneer in devel- oping computers which operate successfully in severe environments. Included in ROLM's outstanding benefits package are: " Highly competitive base salaries. " Profit sharing and stock purchase plans. " Comprehensive health, dental and life insurance programs. " Three month paid sabbatical after six years. " Tuition reimbursement for graduate study at leading universities. " A recreation center unsurpassed in its facilities and available programs. I.'' At bookstores Harvard University Press Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138 pu 0AKLo CLE NPA 5vt35iPrAR'/ of SP'AGHETTI BEDYL C 23 N" WA4IItJGTON J1Jtl ~ G~E lf. 2oGK N1 CE SrrH Y ~ P 3A f9 1Y N 7A'lRMvs T 9UZZTOI~ II N AJ F o g~ t S~ IZ 13Z E tJt 14 c "' O 7 7Q E~ On Campus Interviews Monday, Oct. 4, & Tues., October 5. Meet with our software engineer from ROLM in the Placement Center. See our Company litera- ture in the Placement Center. . If unable to attend an interview, send resume to: I